6533b7defe1ef96bd1275b4c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

A Two-Sided Kingdom: A Sicily of Export and Urban Wheat Supply

Ida Fazio

subject

PoliticsMarket economyProcurementbusiness.industryCapital (economics)languageSubsistence agricultureProduction (economics)Distribution (economics)BusinessPrice systemSicilianlanguage.human_language

description

The Sicilian victualling system sought to guarantee both the subsistence of cities and the income of the great aristocratic landowners interested in the wheat market. A set of economic mechanisms, social practices, and political conflicts unfolded around the urban victualling offices, dealing with wheat and flour distribution, bread production, contracts for the procurement of supplies, and the price system of the mete, run by political elites. North-eastern Sicily was exclusively consumer, while the central-western area produced surpluses for the foreign market and for the rest of the island, including Palermo—the capital city—and Messina—a rich and hungry city—. The centralised office of the maestro portulano granted exports through the fiscal and commercial infrastructure of the caricatori, and export permits were traded in a highly dynamic speculative market.

https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-42064-2_8